One of the most important and famous ideas introduced by Hegel in
his The Phenomenology of Spirit is
the idea of master-slave dialectic, relationship or dynamics. The issue at hand
is self-consciousness and the way it is formed through meeting the other. The
master is the one in the interaction who succeeds in obtaining recognition from
the other in the sense that he imposes himself as the slave’s value. The slave
is the one who sees his own true self in the other (master).
Paradoxically, this original situation changes and it must
do so, Hegel claims, because there are contradictions in it. On the one hand,
by not recognizing the slave as a real person the master deprives himself of
the recognition of his own freedom which he originally demanded and which is a
requirement of his own self-consciousness. The master precisely in being the
master therefore debases himself to an infra-human condition. On the other
hand, by simply carrying out the master’s will the slave objectifies himself through
labor in which transforms material things (manufactures and builds), and
thereby gives form to himself and rises to the level of true existence.
Meaning of master-slave dialectic
The concept of the master-slave relationship has two
aspects. (1) It is a stage in abstract dialectical development of consciousness
and (2) it must be considered in relation to the course of history. The two
dovetail. Human history itself reveals the development of Spirit, the work of
the Spirit on the way to its goal – and Hegel calls this particular historical
stage “Stoic” consciousness.
However, Stoic consciousness contains inherent
contradictions and the master-slave relationship is not really overcome. Rather
both Stoics, Marcus Aurelius (master) and Epictetus (slave), must take flight
into interiority and exalt the idea of true interior freedom, self-sufficiency
(inward turn), leaving their concrete relationship unchanged. Here we see that
the negative attitude towards the concrete relational easily passes into skeptical consciousness for which the
self alone remains while all else (relationship) is subjected to doubt and
negation.
The trouble is that skeptical consciousness contains an
internal contradiction – that is the skeptic cannot eliminate natural
consciousness, and hence affirmation and negation exist in the same attitude
(free to seek my satisfaction in the other yet not free in that I am dependent
on the other for satisfaction). When this happens, we pass into “unhappy
consciousness” which is divided
consciousness. At this level the master-slave relationship which was not
successfully overcome either by Stoic or skeptical consciousness returns in
another form as follows.
Thus, in the master-slave relationship the recognition of
selfhood and freedom both in oneself and the other were divided between two consciousnesses (master
and slave): the master recognizes freedom and selfhood only in himself while
the slave recognizes freedom and self only in the master. However, in “unhappy
consciousness” this division occurs within
one (consciousness) self; that is, in the tension between the fickle and changing (desiring)
self and the ideal changeless self, where the first is something to be denied
or repressed and where the second cannot be attained. The latter ideal or true
self is then projected into an other-worldly sphere and identified as absolute
perfection (e.g. as God existing apart from the world and the finite self),
which results in unhappy alienated
and divided consciousness.
See also: Hegel's master-slave dialectic vs. Nietzsche's master and slave morality
Summary of Phenomenology of Spirit:
Hegel On Self-Consciousness
Hegel on Master-Slave Dialectic